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tv   The O Reilly Factor  FOX News  October 12, 2011 8:00pm-9:00pm PDT

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minute. follow us on twitter, follow user greta wire. o'reilly factor is next. we'll see you on the open thread on greta wire in now, 30 seconds. good night from washington, d.c.. tonight: >> romney care has driven the cost of small business insurance premiums up by 14%. >> we have the lowest number of kids as a percentage uninsured of any state in america. you have the highest. >> bill: once again, governor mitt romney stands his ground and now it's gained momentum because chris christie endorsed him. >> mitt romney is the man we need to lead motorcycle and -- him now. >> charles krauthammer and bernie goldberg. >> if you are going to make an accusation, professor, back it up! what law did they break? big shootout last night with professor cornell west and tavis
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smiley. body language was on the edge of her seat. >> dennis miller on the occupy wall street crowd and hank williams bashing fox news. >> "fox & friends" want to put me down. >> bill: caution, you are about to enter the no spin zone, the factor begins right now. captions by closed captioning services >> bill: hi, i'm bill o'reilly. thanks for watching us tonight. where the republic field stands at this very moment. that is the subject of this evening's talking points memo. first, some bad news, there are at least 13 more republic debates scheduled. 13 more times. the candidates will recite their perspective more viewpoints, 13 more times. moderators will struggle to keep people awake 13 more times. fortunately, i'm here to watch these things if you don't want to. it's not that they are unworthy.
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there are nuggets, like this one last night. >> romney care has driven the cost of small business insurance premiums up by 14% over the national average in massachusetts. so, my question for you would be how would you respond to his criticism of your signature legislative achievement? >> i'm proud of the fact that we took on a major problem of my state. i'm proud of what we were able to accomplish. i will tell you this though, we have the lowest number of kids as a percentage uninsured in any state in america. you have the highest. >> bill: that back and forth was challenging forcing the potential voter to take a side. the real g.o.p. headline yesterday was not the debate. it was chris christie endorsing mitt romney. that's huge for the former governor of massachusetts. christie's support sends a signal to conservative americans it's okay to like romney who is suspect in many right wing circles. and, is being challenged on the right flank by herman cain, the reason christie endorsed romney
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the republic party knows independent voters are much more likely to vote for romney than for cain. independent voters will decide the general election. according to a new pugh poll independence favor romney over president obama 54% to 41%. republic party desperately wants to not only win the white house but the senate as well. thereby totally controlling the agenda in washington. if that happens next year, say goodbye to obama care, it will be repealed faster than the boston red sox fell apart last month. also, taxes will be lowered, federal spending will be cut. and nancy pelosi will be distraught and confused. that's the scenario the republic establishment wants. they believe romney is their best hope for obtaining it. that's the memo. now for the top story tonight analysis. always unpredictable charles krauthammer. where am i going wrong here, charles? >> well, miraculously, bill, you have stumbled into the light of day. [ laughter ] >> but i would make to two points about establishment support for romney. number one, establishment
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support for romney today, given the field, which is now closed, it isn't as if the establishment, whether you believe it exists or not, wasn't lessening for others it went after mitch daniels. he declined went after paul ryan, he declined. those two are examples of far more orthodox ideologically candidates or potential candidates who said. no the last lusting was for chris christie himself, who also declined. the second point i would make is christie is not exactly establishment. yes, he is the governor of a northeast state. he has to make his compromises. he has had his deviations with orthodoxy on stuff like gun control and immigration. is he a heart throb for the tea party. the bluntness, the spirit, with which he defends conservative ideas and he confronts enemies, for example, the labor unions, the teacher's union, et cetera. so he is the guy who straddles the middle and the.
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>> bill: yeah. >> his endorsement was very important. >> bill: he is tuned into the karl roves, to the big money men, haley barbour, jim demint, senator demint from south carolina. these are the real power brokers inside the republic party. and they well know, as i think you do, that herman cain is not going to beat president obama. if herman cain were to secure the republic nomination, as charismatic and as interesting to watch as he is, he is not going to beat barack obama. all right? so that's what the establishment republics are worried about. they believe and i know you know this is true, at this point and it could happen, romney could stumble, perry could miraculously rise from the dead, i guess. romney, in the polls, is beating obama. romney, in the independent precincts is beating obama big. that's why the republic
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establishment wants him. >> romney meets the threshold for conservative acceptance. he is not your number one choice. again, you would go for a ryan. you would go for a christie. you would go for a mitch daniels. but he is acceptable. he meets the threshold. and if you looked at how he performed last night, he was superb. there is no denying that not advocacy. this is analysis. he handled himself on every issue. he was fluent and knowledgeable and informed. look, it isn't only us who are saying he is the one. look what happened when they opened debate to candidates questioning each other. of all the candidates in the debate, four of them devoted their question and their attack against romney. >> bill: yeah, because is he obviously the frontrunner. >> he he is the frontrunner and it wasn't directed at cain or
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perry. >> bill: they were after 9-9-9. they went after him hard on that. >> more the moderators who brought it up when they showed a clip. and then everybody responded. >> bill: everybody jumped on it? >> when you spontaneously gave the floor to the other candidates, who did the majority of them go after? romney? because he is the one to feet beat. >> bill: now, in the snapshot that we have in there, and i think people have to understand how quickly this is coming up, iowa is supposed to be the first week in january. iowa may move it up into december. their straw polls there things are changing so quickly and so rapidly and the country is still so shaky that i'm going to go to say that i would be very, very surprised right now, almost shocked if romney didn't get the nomination am i being naive here or foolish? >> no. i think if you had to bet the house on that, you would win big. i think it's extremely unlikely anybody else will make it.
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>> bill: right. there isn't the dynamic swirling around -- unless herman cain with really, you know, get momentum in new hampshire. new hampshire, romney is way ahead because is he a favorite son. he lives in lake -- that would be herman cain's only shot a stunning upset in new hampshire, correct? >> which i think is extremely unlikely. i think there is an unlikely scenario which would be romney winning in iowa. if he does that. >> bill: romney is ahead in iowa according to polls. >> if he wins in iowa it's over. he runs the table from there. only defeat for romney is if somebody emerges and does really well in iowa and becomes the challenger. the thought of a romney who is up by 20 or 30 points in new hampshire stumbling to the point where he loses new hampshire, it's possible. >> bill: it's possible like hillary clinton. this might be over by february 1st. >> it could be over very quickly.
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this is an unusual race in that sense. >> bill: all right, charles. thanks very much. bernie goldberg on the question are these debates becoming a waste of time? also bernie has some big comments on shootouts with tavis smiley and cordell west. smiley and cordell west. i hope you saw a vacation on a budget with expedia. make it work. booking a flight by itself is an uh-oh. see if we can "stitch" together a better deal. that's a hint, antoine. ooh! see what anandra did? booking your flight and hotel at the same time gets you prices hotels and airlines won't let expedia show separately. book it. major wow factor! where you book matters. expedia.
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the nascar nationwide series, i know pleasing fans is a top priority, 'cause without the fans, there'd be no nascar.
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just like if it weren't for customers, there'd be no nationwide. that's why they serve their customers' needs, not shareholder profits. because as a mutual, nationwide doesn't report to wall street, they report to their customers. and that's just one more reason why the earnhardt family has trusted nationwide for more than 30 years. nationwide is on your side. >> bill: in the weekdays with bernie segment tonight. continuing with lead story where the republic party stands.
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joining us from north carolina the purveyor the bernard goldberg.com. mr. goldberg. first of all, bernie, charlie rose last night, roll the tape. >> they will each have 30 seconds to pose and answer. we'll have one minute to respond. 30 seconds for a question. one minute to respond. proceed in alphabetical order. >> romney is before me. r. >> i'm sorry. you are right. governor romney? [ laughter ] >> very good. i missed school that day when they said r is before s. >> bill: not the greatest way to start the debate off. we all make mistakes. everybody does. now, the serious question though is can anybody control 8, 9 individuals on a stage in a debate forum? i don't think anybody can do it i don't care it matters to be honest with you. i don't think there is one person out there who tunes in to watch the moderator.
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unless the moderator does something really, really dumb like ask some politically loaded question, it doesn't matter. i will tell you something else, bill. i don't think the answers that the candidates give to policy questions matters all that much with the people watching either. unless there is a major gaffe the way gerald ford during the debate with jimmy carter said that eastern europe wasn't under the dominance of the soviet union. i don't think that matters either. i think the reason that the debates are important is because they convey an impression to the voters and that's why rick perry is done. he is finished. he conveys an impression of someone who needs about a gallon of geritol and would rather be any place than on the stage with the other candidates. and i think that's why mitt romney is leading because he conveys an impression of someone who is both smart and attractive
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and in this year very important confident. by the way, not one person in america, bill, who could tell you anything in his 59 point plan. that's not why they like him. they like him because of the impression he conveys in the debates. this is very important. listen to 10 minutes of talk radio. you will see how much the true blue most compassionate conservatives out there do not like mitt romney. >> bill: that's not a big voting block. it's talk radio but it's not a big voting block. let me ask you this. 13 more, bernie? 13 more of these things? >> i thought the debates were really important up until -- for the first five or 600 of them. i thought that's when they wereth most important. and they are sort of going down hill from here. >> bill: there is another one next week. and i mean, you just run out of things -- unless there is a big news event. see now, last night, rose missed a big opportunity.
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and with all due respect to him. had this big iranian story yesterday. all right? so i would say look, i know this is about economics here but we had a big breaking news story. what are you going to do specifically about iran, bing, bing, bing, bing, bing. i would have done that because they would have been totally unprepared for that then you would have seen what they had and that's relevant to today. it's just rehearsed answers and it's dull. >> i guess they made a decision it was about the economy and stick to it. >> bill: it was a dumb decision it didn't serve the american people well. >> maybe. for the first 500 or 600 debates, fine, i'm getting a little tired of it at this point. >> bill: i think everybody is did you see the brothers with me last night tavis and professor west. >> yes. >> bill: go ahead. >> i got the impression watching that, let's forget about the shootout. let's just do the content of
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what they said. i came away with the impression that they were saying that poor people are somehow victims of a system that doesn't care very much about them and is stacked against them. >> bill: oligarchs keep the poor people down. that's the theme. >> right. but what they didn't talk about last night, not a lot anyway, is about how dysfunction is a much greater cause of poverty. dysfunctional behavior than anything people on wall street have ever done. >> bill: i brought that out. >> you did with substance abuse. i'm not talking about -- it goes way, way beyond substance abuse. look, these two gentlemen are rightly concerned about poverty in general and about poverty among black people in particular. totally understandable. 70% of black kids grow up, were born out of wedlock. that is the greatest single cause of poverty in america. >> bill: they won't acknowledge that and then when i brought up the shocking statistic that 9%
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of americans are addicted to some kind of substance, that makes it very hard for them to earn a decent living. then i was being unsympathetic to the poor. when they couldn't really answer that stat, you are march jingle bellizeing them and unsympathetic. into i'm trying to get to the root cause of the problem than making things better rather than demonizing people on wall street who don't have anything to do with it. >> hard to believe but i couldn't have said that better. they don't want to do that because they think it's putting the onus on the people who are poor. >> bill: yeah the personal responsibility thing. >> that's right. exactly. the single most important statistic i have ever seen about poverty, regardless of race came from a guy named william gull stolen, who was in the clinton administration a democrat. he says if you do three things you won't wind up in poverty. finish high school. don't have a baby until you are married. don't have a baby until you are at least 20 years old.
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people who did all three things, only 8% of them wound up in poverty. people who didn't, 79% wound up in poverty. but brother tavis smiley and brother cornell west didn't talk about that last night because that's something that makes them feel uncomfortable. it's much easier. >> bill: i don't know whether it makes them uncomfortable or not. i didn't see the documentary that tavis produced and he said he did deal with it? >> not doing any favors to poor people by not talking constantly about dysfunctional behavior. >> you know what? i like those guys. they hate me, i think. i like them. i like the debate. i liked the whole back and forth. i think that was a very illuminating segment. i appreciate it, bernie. body language will analyze my segment with tavis smiley and professor west shortly. another report that a green company may swallow up for than a billion taxpayer dollars looking solyndra look paltry.
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>> bill: impact segment tonight, as you may know the solyndra solar panel company received more than 1.5 billion-dollar taxpayer dollars from the obama administration went bankrupt and down the drain. a green company called sun power solar power deal received a loan guarantee of $1.2 billion from the obama administration. and that company may now be in trouble as well. with us, elizabeth mcdonald, stocks editor at the fox business network. these are the kind of stories that get fox news labeled anti-obama, right wing shils.
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republic party cronies. i have to tell everybody, i'm amazed, if this is true, i'm just amazed at what's happening in washington. so let's run it right down. what is sun power? where is that? >> they are in california. they make solar panels. >> bill: just like solyndra. they were in competition with solyndra? >> essentially, yes. >> bill: solyndra got 537 million in loans. all right? these guys get 1.2 billion in guaranteed loans. they are still in business. they didn't go bankrupt yet, right? >> that's correct. >> bill: but they may. >> they could. this whole project that sun power is helping to operate could really go under. and that's the problem with this whole venture being run by the department of energy. they think that they can cherry pick and be like the venture capital crowd or hedge fund guys and know what projects are going to make taxpayers money. they can't. the private money is not going to go into these ventures, right? then what's happening is these solar companies are coming with tin cup in hand to the u.s.
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taxpayer. >> bill: this company i understand was hot at one time. wasn't the stock way up there at one time. >> stock was up and cratered down. >> trading around 8 or $9. >> bill: stop. so the stock in the company was above $100? >> yeah. >> bill: in 2007 and now it's at $8 a share? >> yeah. that's right. >> bill: still, our department of energy says you know, that might be a good bet to put a $1.2 billion into a stock that's gone down 95%. >> yeah, that's right, bill. so, you know. >> bill: is it really right though? >> no, it's not right. >> bill: i'm scared. >> no. i'm upset. you are right to say that this is a bipartisan taxpayer issue. this is not democrat. it's not republic. it is robbing -- it's an abuse of the public purse. >> bill: that's very well put. >> that's what it is. >> bill: this is what we have now. the obama administration in its quest to develop alternative energy wants to throw this money, all right, taxpayer money
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at these companies, hoping that they will get something that will get us away from fossil fuels. that's what it looks like to me. they don't know if it will work. another 1.2 billion. chuck it in there, if it doesn't work it doesn't work. >> that's right. like throwing spaghetti at the wall. we are creating energy jobs. touting the 40 with loan guarantee program. 66,000 jobs created or saved. this buy into that kind of rhetoric. with this project dollar cost for the loan guarantee. if this project goes up talking $80 million per job. just 15 permanent jobs created by this project. >> bill: 1.2 billion that has been loaned to this company, and it goes bankrupt like solyndra did, it will be how many jobs lost? >> 15. 1-5. >> bill: so we have got to say it's not a job play. it's a speculative play to get some solar energy available so
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we can get away from fossil fuels. that's what it looks to me. these stories run reported by the press. when we report them we get accused of being anti-obama. taking taxpayer money and flushing it down the drain. >> it is. rat holes. that's where the media focus should be. that's where the journalists should be doing the reporting. again, abuse of the taxpayers abuse. >> bill: sun power, where is this in california? >> they are basically in southern -- operating southern california. >> bill: keep us posted if this goes bankrupt. we will report it. we don't want the money to be wasted. elizabeth, thank you. >> sure. >> bill: plenty more ahead as the factor moves along this evening. body language on me and jon stewart. me and cornell west and eric holder in the congressional hot seat. then, dennis miller on the occupy wall street protesters and hank williams attacking fox news. news. we hope you stay tuned to those news. we hope you stay tuned to those do you have an irregular heartbeat
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>> bill: body language segment tonight beginning with attorney general eric holder telling a congressional committee he didn't know much about fast and furious. >> when did you first know about the program officially, i believe, called fast and furious, to the best of your knowledge, what date? >> i'm not sure of the exact date, but i probably heard about fast and furious for the first time over the last few weeks. >> did your deputy attorney general james kohl authorize it. >> i'm sorry, it would somebody in. >> deputy attorney general james kohl? >> i didn't hear, did. >> did the deputy attorney general authorize it? >> my guess would be no, mr. kohl, i don't think was -- i think, i don't think he was in the department at the time. >> bill: here now to analyze body language maven tonya reiman. i'm not putting you on the spot. subsequently memos came out to cast doubt on whether the attorney general is being truthful. you can as a body language expert telling when someone is
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trying to deceive by their actions? >> yes, and no. and the reason it's yes and no is because at this point pickly there is very fine line between anxiety and deception. what we wind up looking at as past baselines and then when they are speaking the context in which they are speaking in. so, as i'm looking at him, i see he does something called a head swagger that head swagger goes against the intention cue. he shakes his head up and down and then side to side. when you see that you recognize that that's his words going opposite his unconscious head-shaking. here i think he is holding something back. that would be my first impression. if the documents come out saying that they really feel he is being deceptive, my answer to you is he is holding back information that he doesn't want to give out. you know that because forward from here he starts doing all these distracting techniques, the repetitious questions. the quizzical look. >> bill: do you believe he didn't hear the question which was posed very loudly. >> no. i think he was looking for an out. he was trying to distract.
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>> bill: you believe he heard the question and then he said he didn't to buy more time. >> exactly. >> bill: that's interesting. >> that's what people tend to do. they distract. >> let me ask you this. you believe that. >> yes. >> bill: any certainty. 50%, 70? 90. >> 70%. >> bill: that he did and he was fudging it? >> trying to buy himself some time. you look at that face what? huh? you recognize there is an element of he is overdoing it so to speak. >> bill: o'reilly and stewart always, you know, an interesting situation. roll it. >> do we all know what the $16 muffin is? all right. see, you don't even know what the $16 muffin is. >> what neighborhood do you live in? [ laughter ] who makes a $16 muffin? >> this is great. i'm glad. >> all right. >> bill: $16 muffin, broke the story last week on the factor. you were otherwise occupied.
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making your little wise remarks. not reading what's happening. >> bill: that was a genuine. i was there. i know what it was. did you pick up anything interesting there? >> what i love is that you are playing the audience. you are endearing them to you. you talk to the audience. you are charming more likeable to audience have dominance crews, palms down. here, palms down. fingers aren't tensed. >> your hand is side. hand is loose. no tension here. >> bill: look at the finger. finger is up though. >> finger is like this. >> finger is bent from getting killed. >> when we look at the next clip you will see a very big difference. you can hear the inflex of your voice is different. >> bill: what you say is i'm completely dominating stewart. >> no. what i say you are playing here and it's good. >> bill: got to get on to the third one because it's me and
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cornell west. go. >> bill: if you are going to make an accusation, professor, as a learned academic, that o'neil or the other fat cats on wall street broke the law, back it up. what law did they break? yes? >> if we were able to engage an investigation and look at what was going on between 2007 and 2008, my hunch is we would find some criminal behavior, my brother. >> bill: hunch? >> yeah but we can't get to it. >> bill: maybe that's right but you can't make an accusation on a hunch. >> bill, there has been best selling books -- major texts out there. you are a reader. you know that. >> bill: you guys come up. you take your law school, princeton or wherever else. you develop an illegality and i will put it on the air. >> bill: okay, number one, a difference in my finger? >> not only your finger, do you see where your thumb is. your finger is tight. your voice is much harcher. >> i had a pin. >> it doesn't matter.
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thumb different position and fingers much more tense. >> bill: serious deal. >> exactly that's how you can tell there is a difference and there is a clear indicator that you're more frustrated. >> bill: all right. now, on him, when he couldn't answer the question about what law they broke, i mean, that -- >> -- with the pause, that great pause? >> bill: yeah. >> i have a feeling he was about to say something and then changed his mind and that's when he had that big wide o mouth like. >> bill: censored whatever he was going to say and we don't know why. >> yeah. >> bill: tonya reiman, everybody, come right back, miller time, d-man on the continuing occupy wall street story and hank williams attacking fox news. miller is next. to be more environmentally aware, we are now printing on the back sides of used paper and we switched to fedex cause a lot of their packaging contains recycled materials. tell them what else fedex does. well we're now using more electric trucks and lower emission planes. we even offer a reusable envelope. now, can't we at least print on the back sides of used paper? what's the executive compensation list...?
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>> bill: thanks for staying with us. bill o'reilly. miller time segment tonight, battle in the media over the occupy wall street crowd.
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many liberal sympathize protesters. most media types are appalled at the display. where does the sage of southern california stand. dennis miller joins us now from los angeles. all right, so where do you stand on these people? >> well, i realize i'm no longer the biggest loser on wall street this year. which up to this point my broker assures me i was. i were -- no, i was. like most kids billie, the kids in this group don't anger me. some of the old losers i look at get on with it for god's sake. kids always through the ages dedicated their lives to core beliefs that they are not wise enough to elaborate on. they are at the parapits but they sort of miss the point. and when you mix into the fact that we raise the generation a little narcissist, you know what i mean? like no dodge ball, relativism, and everything, everybody gets the same grades, nobody wins tug of wars, you got a bunch of kids
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taught to be precious out there and i don't know that they know how to deal with real hardship that there is not an app. to deal with real hardships. i think that's where it stems. i don't look at the kids and go i would have probably been one of those kids. >> bill: so i ask you, is there any difference between those guys and the woodstock people during the vietnam war running around? any difference in the crews? >> well, listen, the woodstock generation grated a little more but they had a little fashion. >> bill: letter hand bands. >> the head don't work for me. i like the hendrix look that was cool. break this thing up overnight and set up a jobs fair. offering jobs start at entry level position that afternoon. not glamorous work. >> bill: we always used clips of them saying not going to take 7 buck an hour jobs. >> not minimum wage. >> bill: every cab company in
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new york city is desperate for people to speak english. ever take a cab in this city? you have got to speak farsi if you want to go -- they don't know. if you speak english they want you in the cab. that's 50 grand. yeah, you got to drive around and work. they don't want to do that. >> thank god i'm fluent in farsi. if you opened up a job out there, you would see con trails heading away from that park. >> bill: there is no way. herman cain, since this is absolutely true. since miller endorsed herman cain he shot through the polls. you did it, miller. you took him with you. >> i hope you don't think i cast dispersions on mitt romney. i doug him when i met him a few weeks ago. i think he would be a great president. i like herman because i think is he a bit of an underdog and i dig his message. >> bill: the power that once you got behind mr. cain his poll numbers shot up. his confidence level shot up.
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we ought to get him on the bolder fresher tour, miller. >> listen, what helps herman cain more than my endorsement is guys like cornell west and by the way for the uninitiated if you want to find out who dr. west is google downside of tenure and you will find out and tavis smiley and guys like that who don't dig them, tavis works for public tv and i can only assume that he says what they wanted juan williams to say and juan didn't say it. so, you know, when guys like that get on herman, that makes me want to be more on herman's side. >> bill: that's an interesting point because he had been attacked now, so it draws more people into him who, you know, would be politically compatible with his thinking. they feel sorry for him and support him. that's an interesting point. >> listen, harry belafonte attacks him because he is broke for god's sake. how much can that residual check on the deo song be? it's not even like the monster mash we saidial check which
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comes around once a year. >> bill: i liked that song. hank williams jr. talking about creative artist comes on "fox & friends" and he makes a comparison about president obama the speaker of the house boehner playing golf like hitler or something. breaks loose and gets fired from espn. now hank is mad at the "fox & friends" guys and has a song. roll the tape. ♪ "fox & friends" ♪ wanna put me down ♪ ask for my opinion ♪ and then twist it all around ♪ supposed to be talking about my father's new cd ♪ well two can play that gotcha game ♪ just wait and see ♪ don't tread on me.
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>> bill: it was a live interview. how do you twist a live interview around. it wasn't edited. you said what you said. they gave you 15 chances to take it back and put it in perspective. unbelievable. >> all i know that is an am dayous type talent to come up with a song like that in 48 hours. beautiful. >> bill: it rivals dale. >> hank, here is all that happens. espn stands for extra sensitive pyes. you had to get whacked. it's not personal. you know something, you should quit digging the grave now because roger ailes will forgive anything except shooting in the tent. you just shot in the tent. >> bill: they didn't do anything. the "fox & friends" guys -- hank, do you really mean that? would you like to put it another way? come on. >> this is another reason i like herman cain. like he said, everybody should lighten up. let me in closing explain the 9-9-9 thing real simply. government comes to your door.
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they ask for more of your money and you say 9-9-9. >> bill: a little german reference there from the sage of southern california. >> german, fallsy, it's english i have trouble with. >> bill: now he goes back to prison. update on bolder fresher tour. showing in orange county, california at the theater sold out in three hours. so we're going to do a second show if miller can hack it tickets on sale friday there are seven v.i.p. tickets left for the first show. also details on the big show saturday october 29th as well as richmond city. hope to see you guys. in a moment, did you see that vice president joe biden talking about confronting iran. also some violent rhetoric from the occupy wall street folks. coming right back. capital one's new cash rewards card gives you a 50 percent annual bonus. so you earn 50 percent more cash. if you're not satisfied with 50% more cash, send it back!
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>> bill: back of the book segment tonight, did you see that? and we begin with what the obama administration will do now that it seems iran has decided to attack the u.s.a. >> you say being held accountable. right now it seems to be sanctions. is that enough? we're talking about an attack on american soil. >> well, what we're talking about is that we have to make sure, first and foremost, and i think we have done this incredibly well so far. is to unite the whole world and the moral disappear probation of the iranian actions so whatever action ultimately is taken, whether it's an additional sanction, some of which we have already taken, and nothing has been taken off the table. >> bill: a lot of takens in there. didn't quite get it. joining us from las vegas fox news correspondent juliet huddy. i don't know what he said. >> lame. >> bill: that's why we have you here.
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what did he say? >> oh really? i'm not quite sure. do i hope that his wishy washy response as far as specifics go is not, you know, sort of an implication about how the obama administration is going to handle this situation with iran. but you know what? speaker boehner also talked about this. he addressed. this he kind of gave a wishy washy response too. >> bill: got to cut them a little slack because you don't tell the enemy what you are going to do with the enemy. that's not what you do in the art of war. >> there wasn't an attack. so we can't actually go in there. there wasn't an attack on u.s. soil. >> bill: attempted attack. >> there was an effort to attempt an attack. >> bill: that's annual attempt, juliet. effort and attempt pretty much the same thing. it's called a synonym. so anyway, and threatening biden says we did this -- hasn't taken any actions again them. i'm not sure action has been taken against them either.
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juliet and o'reilly no idea what the vice president said. now, we do know what this crazy occupy wall street protester said. roll the tape. >> >> bill: all right. power to the people right on. see, this is why you can't hang with those people. the guy would drive you crazy listening to that guy for more than 30 seconds. that's why we had to stop him. >> he had lot of people clapping
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and cheering for him revolution, yeah. everybody would cheer. i think like three quarters of the crowd has no idea what he is talking to. i think that's actually. >> bill: saying that gondii is a tumor, which is ridiculous. this is why i didn't join in the woodstock crowd that we talked about with miller. because, do you want this guy as your leader? i mean, that's all i had to see is this guy. no, i don't think i'm going to join this group. go ahead. >> but at least initially when the media was going out and talking to these protesters, half of them couldn't put a sentence together they were so high. you go by the protest you get a contact high. at least now, have you got to give them credit. at least now they have these people that can form a sentence. may be some marxist theory but at least they are getting people out there who now how to rally a crowd articulate the thing. >> paying these guys out there to do this. the agitators. i don't have much use for this
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whole thing. i don't think it's constructive. >> like a renaissance fair. >> bill: you haven't seen any of these guys in vegas, have you, juliet? not occupying anything yet there? >> no. i have seen a few elvis impersonators though. revolution. >> bill: pinheads and patriots. the final tally of our auction for the wounded warriors. you will not believe how much mo 4g-- the next evolution in wireless technology. with advanced power, the verizon 4g lte network makes your business run faster: smartphones, laptops, tablets, mobile hotspots. but not all 4g is created equal. among the major carriers, only verizon's 4g network is 100% lte, the gold standard of wireless technology. and while other carriers may have limited lte coverage, verizon is the largest lte network in america and ever-growing. with verizon 4g lte, you can invent new ways to upgrade your business using real-time group meetings from remote locations, video conferencing, mobile credit-card payments, lightning-fast downloads,
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promotion. buy a copy of my number one best-seller "killing lincoln" and we will send you lis wiehl's new thriller, waking hours. with the gift giving season about to begin, do the math. you get one book free. and another deal if you become a billoreilly.com premium member you get "killing lincoln" absolute absolutely free. so check it out. now the e-mail. >> fair question, yoga, but you did not report my remarks accurately. i didn't defend mr. cain's position. i defended his right to hold it. african-american voting block is an interesting discussion topic. that's point i made. gym cook, new york city. bill, practice what you preach.
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>> are you kidding me? are you kidding me? belafonte said that cain is a bad man. bad apple, quote. to describe belafonte's mind-set, i said he's a zombie. he's not a real zombie, jim. william fairly, dover[gñ delawa. >> john, new york city. >> occupy wall street people have made it very clear that low wage jobs are unacceptable to them, john. scott campbell of japan.
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>> from new york city. dr. william hegg. >> we are very sorry for your loss, doctor. david from illinois. >> susan, louisville, kentucky. >> that made my trip over there worthwhile, susan, that letter. i was wondering why i was going there. no, we always enjoy that.
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i am going to be on letterman thursday night. please pray for me. and mark pearl man was the high bidder for our wounded warrior auction. mark send $60,000 for this unique historical poster signed by the five american living presidents. but mark didn't stop him. his company raised an additional $140,000 for the warriors. on top of that, viewers bought facsimiles of the presidential document for another $200,000. total $400,000 to the wounded warrior project. thank you all. and he's a patriot. we will be auctionening off another one of those historical posters in december. the word of the day, i love this word, do not be a

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